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Afoot & Afield: Denver, Boulder, Fort Collins, and Rocky Mountain National Park: 184 Spectacular Outings in the Colorado Rockies

Afoot & Afield: Denver, Boulder, Fort Collins, and Rocky Mountain National Park: 184 Spectacular Outings in the Colorado Rockies

Current price: $24.95
Publication Date: July 7th, 2015
Publisher:
Wilderness Press
ISBN:
9780899977553
Pages:
416
Usually Ships in 1 to 5 Days

Description

This book showcases more than 180 great hikes around the Denver, Colorado, area.

About the Author

Alan Apt has been roaming Colorado's hills and dales for more than 30 years. He is the author of the best-selling guidebook "Snowshoe Routes: Colorado's Front Range." He is a somewhat reformed peak bagger who has climbed many of the state's highest summits but also thoroughly enjoys the lakes, vales, and rivers. Alan is an avid hiker, biker, snowshoer, backcountry skier, kayaker, and backpacker and has trekked in the Andes, Alps, Himalayas, and Sierra Nevada. Alan is a member of the Colorado Mountain Club and a Sierra Club trip leader, as well as a member of Friends of the Poudre. He is a former Fort Collins city council member and worked to create the city's Wind Power Program. He also served on the city's Natural Resources Board. He is a National Ski Patrol volunteer member with the Bryan Mountain Nordic Ski Patrol. Formerly a technical book publisher, he is now a freelance writer and editor living in Nederland, Colorado. Kay Turnbaugh, an avid hiker, mountain biker, road biker, snowshoer, and skier, has lived in the small mountain town of Nederland, Colorado, for almost all of her adult life. She was the editor and publisher of "The Mountain-Ear," an award-winning weekly newspaper in Nederland, for 27 years. She has written three books: "The Mountain Pine Beetle--Tiny but Mighty," a book for 8- to 12-year-olds that is also enjoyed by many adults; "Around Nederland," a book about Nederland's history; and "The Last of the Wild West Cowgirls," a biography of Goldie Griffith, who rode bucking broncos for Buffalo Bill, trained war dogs, ranched near Nederland, ran restaurants, and reinvented herself whenever necessary. "The Last of the Wild West Cowgirls" won a Willa Literary Award in 2010 for creative nonfiction.